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Cindy
Sheehan, Liberal Media Delight
Activist grief… news at eleven…
[by Bruce S. Thornton] 8/11/05
The liberal
media is delighted with Cindy Sheehan. This is the woman who
lost a son in Iraq and has camped outside President Bush's
Crawford Ranch, intending to stay until the President speaks
with her or returns to Washington. For the reporters waiting
around in the dusty heat of West Texas, Ms. Sheehan is a godsend,
a dramatic, heart-wrenching story that gives the media both
a telegenic drama and another opportunity for indulging their
dislike of Bush and the war in Iraq.
No one should
trivialize Ms. Sheehan's grief, nor fail to understand why she
is angry
and wants to hold someone accountable. The worst
thing a parent can experience is to lose a child, and those of
us blessed enough not to have had that experience cannot judge
the reaction of those who have. Yet the media's eagerness to
publicize and exploit a grieving mother's anger and sorrow can
be criticized, for it points to a larger pathology in our culture––the
privileging of the suffering victim as someone who possesses
superior insight and so must be heeded and catered to.
This elevation of
the victim into a combination sage and secular martyr reflects
conditions peculiar to the modern world. Most
important is the simple fact that compared to the vast majority
of humans who've ever lived, we in the West today have been freed
from the everyday suffering and misery that earlier generations
accepted as part of human existence. For them, as the Greek playwright
Euripides put it, “Suffering is necessity for mortals.” Daily
physical pain, early death, famine, malnutrition, chronic disease,
violence from fellow humans and nature––all were
simply non-negotiable realities of life that had to be endured.
Suffering didn't make you special; it just made you human, like
everybody else.
We moderns, of course,
have eliminated many of those evils, while magnifying and dramatizing
what suffering remains. And
this success has created a monumental change in how we view life
and its possibilities: rather than accepting that suffering is
a necessity, we view it as an anomaly, a glitch in the system
that should be corrected and that, given how litigious we are,
someone is responsible for. The result is our outrageous expectations
about human life and its risks and costs. We still want to achieve
our various noble aims and good intentions––peace,
freedom, security, and prosperity for all––but only
if we can do so without making anybody suffer or even feel bad,
including our enemies. We want utopia, a world in which everyone
is well fed, secure, and happy, but we want it on the cheap.
So yes, a brutal dictator who has murdered hundreds of thousands
and is eager to achieve weapons to kill millions more should
be eliminated, the suffering that he inflicts and that ruins
our dinner stopped--but once the butcher's bill arrives, we change
our minds. The same people who castigate us for allowing the
slaughter in Rwanda and Sudan and a dozen other venues now chide
us for insuring that such brutality stops in Iraq. They chafe
at the unforeseen consequences, mistakes, and
inadvertent death that always and everywhere has accompanied
the use of force. How many tens of thousands died unnecessarily
in World War II, the “good war,” because of such
contingencies? The tragic truth of action is that we have to
accept those risks and accept that to achieve a future good we
often have to risk a present evil. The only alternative is never
to use force, and pacifism is a juvenile ideal refuted on every
page of history.
This unreal view of
life and suffering and risk is abetted by the mass media, one
of whose most important commodities is human
misery and emotional drama. Discussions of principle and evidence
and long-term goals and their costs and risks are dry and tedious,
filled with complexity and uncertainty; they simply don't play
as well as do the simple stories of individual victims and their
suffering, personal dramas we all can identify with and respond
to on a visceral level. And along with our enjoyment, we can
display our culture's most important virtue: sensitivity to suffering,
the sure sign of moral superiority. To talk, as Lincoln did,
of the “terrible arithmetic,” the tragic truth that
some must die today so that more don't die tomorrow, is insensitive
and callous in the world of Oprah and Dr. Phil.
This obsession with the emotional drama of suffering is particularly
dangerous in a democracy that depends on its citizens to make
decisions based on the best information and the most coherent
understanding of principle that they can muster, a process that
the fog of emotion and sentiment compromises. The fact is, as
hard as it may sound, the sufferer or the victim isn't necessarily
smarter or even more moral than anybody else. On the contrary,
the overwhelming emotion of loss and grief are likely to blind
one to the facts and principles upon which public policy and
action should be based.
This is precisely the assumption that governs the selection
of juries.
If a drunk driver is on trial, only incompetence allows on the
jury someone who has lost a loved one to a drunk driver. Everyone
assumes that such a person will be prejudiced by his personal
experience and blinded by emotion, and thus less capable of rationally
evaluating the facts and coming to a just decision based on evidence
and argument.
Yet when it comes
to war, we think just the opposite. Combat veterans are treated
as oracles even though a knowledge of the
horrors of combat doesn't necessarily make one an expert on the
larger purposes and goals of war. Indeed, the trauma of those
experiences can just as likely blind one to those larger issues.
Surely the memory of the Great War's horrors contributed to Europe’s
appeasement of Hitler, with the result that it took 50 million
dead to stop Nazism rather than one or two million.
As much as we respect and sympathize with Ms. Sheehan's grief,
then, we are under no obligation to respect her opinion about
the necessity or justice of this war, or give it any more of
a hearing than anybody else's. In fact, we should suspect that
it reflects her understandable grief rather than any superior
insight into the reasons for going to war. Those reasons should
be debated and discussed through the political process, and they
should reflect as much as possible fact and rational argument.
Presenting those facts and arguments is the job of a responsible
media. Unfortunately, exploiting suffering and indulging their
political prejudices are often more important to the media than
providing their fellow citizens with the resources needed to
make the
best decision. tOR
copyright
2005 Bruce S. Thornton
Searching for Joaquin
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Greek Ways
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Bonfire of the Humanities
by Victor Davis Hanson, John Heath, Bruce S. Thornton
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Plagues of the Mind
by Bruce S. Thornton
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Eros: The Myth of Ancient Greek
Sexuality
by Bruce S. Thornton
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